Newspaper Page Text
i m
era .composed euui
tliia consti tiM'nt a 1
unusual in other Boils.
Clayey soils nre not fro
posed entirety of lime, but that
istitucnt abounds irt quantities
lecid^Lstimulus anu
1\ trees that diu
tlur Emapn assigned was that
•if. too R .nrtously. We never
,, tteoi. A bhofcp material to ton
under orchard trees will pay. If
the farmer has no material for top-dress-
log. he shdnld run his harrow through
the summer to keep down weeds and to
permit the roo s to have the touefit of
wlat little food there may bo in the*
I-
Of
from
sllicio'us Boils lire not free from clay.
r, n!cnreoua noils mnv contain ruteiii ana
ao that in fai t tile
~ :.i.
Jrchard trees often receive too much
pruning. In young tress o Iv thin out
ao as not to have the main leaders cross
ing or interfering one wifli ano her; or
when a few shoots are observed to be
S owing mueh stronger than the rest eut
em away. 11 v a long series o* hearing,
brunches will often get hark bound, and
f tunted, preventing a passage of sap to
be leaves. In such eases the san seems
to revenge itself by foreinir out vigorous
young shoot - a long way down from the
top of the tree. It is down to these
vigorous young shoots that it is recom
mended to cut the bearing branches
•way. Of course, much of (Ids work
can only be left to the judgment of the
gipwbr.* If the tree bears ns fine fruit as
aver no surh *cvere pruning i necessary;
but if it fails to yield satisfactorv crops,
now is the time to do the cutting.
*HoaTfOFT.Tl RVTi NOTE*.
-le with each other.
■*'«rthe soils of any fields
m approximation
and c. w can easily distin-
soils ming. ’ soil.or from
In eXAtainii. ’v distin-
can easily Make .
their cottl{lPsitioh. hv.
guish a windy frotq fl clnyc.,
a calcnrcdhA ohb. We can easi v
erui8h orcahi'c Hinttbr from clay or
liven fields, that yield paving crops
greatly in their composition. The bast
and.
ture announcement .
igitafed Kngland in iha fi
1*8,'kuB «a«re<i » »«ni« «iooBg
holder, of g«. nook. Thi. happen
owing to the unauthorised publication
of a few eiithu.ia.Uc phrere. from «
private letter. Aa a matter offact, a»
that time Mr. Edlren waa far Iron the
.oliitimi of the mystery of producing
ami diffusing light by electricity, lie
had not then earned the splendid suc
cess be has now achieved.
Then there ware interview* of Edison
noreat-
•*'- W ?o“e beared ’bout mv cal
, I was much surprised to hear
5 vou m ng. t ^ Mrep,i#d - *‘®be must be
# os ’afi ,e tol'able young is ■■■
gSSG&ES
A pear tree, when it is bearing fruit,
demands a great deal of water. If pear
trees are watered daily with liquid ma
nure, or water from the house sewer,
and chamber Hops, the fruit will increase
In sice and quality.
New York pear-growors regard tlio
duchesse ns the most profitable dwarf
pear that ran bo grown. They
planted twelve foct bv six. In culti-
’Wating,. 1be plow is run between the rows,
■ and the loose soil thrown upon the gran
binder the .trees, thus keeping down its
*. growth.
’Iu trimming off.bfaitehes they should
be cut citato tbfe mtnkso thutjibttaad
•tumps mtlfl aWlmnrtiie tret 1 , also that
tho bark may readily grow over. Many
fruit trees become h ” * *’ ‘
premature dqtiv fro;
tratlng throw'ji* old saw-’chi
pruuing. Scars fliould lie
tarred, ot nt'rerwise p
Vain.
fall intp
?u y°w|
made 19
nted or
from the
application
*id iron, pi
*f li
me, wood-ashej
•uml*. tile rrtots^
not doing well,
• a healthy con-
quality of the
nursery Jrees-r-
dn to redness' in
■ it in one gal-
■ warm apply it
%tid old iron.put
•of fruit trees that are
will restore thy trees* ti
'flition.au 1 improve the
fruit. A^tai wash f..r
'Heat an»,flee<«f sal so
•a iron pot, ami. dissolve
lob of water, and while
to the trunk.
Apples, in addition to being a de
licious fruit, make* a pfbamnt medicine.
A raw, mellow apple, is digested in mi
Lour and a half, while boiled cabbage
jiles are
coarse
flesh
admirable effect
requires five hours. Iftokedapnli
eateu frequently atfflreqk&igt with t
bread and Butter, without meat or
•f foy kind, it ha-
on the general sy
constipation, cori
coi ling off febrih
totally than the
eiaea.
»ften
ting aciditii
•onflirttina niorofef?
o^'approfcil mefli-*
* FARM NOTES.
To keep the striped^ bugs from cucum
bers saturate ashes with keresenoand ap
ply a handful in a hjU.
"Persons uai»*.nitnito of sod,, nS n f er .
tilixer ought to hear in mind that of all
[ fertiliser. it i. the easiest washed out
from trie toil
To destroy hues on squashes aud eu-
camber vines, 'biidvr. a tabiespoonful
aaltpet*"- { --
thjs
pailful of water, put a pint
1 each hill, shaping the oarth
,shaping
, read mill...
) kill grub m pench tree
to each tre
way for a farmer to examine soils atid to
determine their capacity for raising spe
cial crops is to sow patches of different
seed and ascertain by actual observation*
what plants grow the best—what fields
yield the motd remunerative crops.
Other circumstances exist tliat add
fertility to nearly ev rv soil. Drainage
may often render an acid soil sweet; I’ow
rootlets arc able to withstand the harm
ful action of long soaking.
WHAT FF.RTII.lZKH ?
A farmer must learn bv observation
and exiieHmeht what his soil took* ami
what his special crops require, before he
can understand!nglv apply afiv special
fertilizer. Whenever stable manure is
applied to hoed crops, the nearer you
can koop it to thejfurface die boiler. ‘
ff* fMrotiTA?CK £
The colt'ti crop this season Is hall a
million bales greater than ever before.
Tobacco is-in ’©xoess of all former esti
mates by 12.000,000 pounds, sugar 200,-
000 hogsheads, the excess of wheat is
20,000,000 bushels, .and corn 10(1,000.000.
And yet even fnrpier* tVmsel'-es cnmiol
HJalifce the ihq>ortance of the agriedltu-
ral interests, hml not onlv farmers, hut
politicians, legislators ami tho public
generally. There is no industry so (le-
serving the f«»stcring care of the govern
ment.
Xoit
mighty inve.
shop. After a k >
silence, as Edison (k
interviawers, fot the rt».
took time apd strength, anu .
him tb dftfllMHades that exciu *
mockery of rnttailMance, We hear*
the lamp in which pnftinum Waa em
ployed, atid it* contplet gearing tapr*
vent the flow of tod inttoh electricity.
The general effect <ft this WAS Vo r©»
duce the anticipation of Edison’s'suc
cess to minimum. The panic in gas
stock passed away Altttgotneh The ap
peal to American miners to lind enough
locaWeporter
„ ter myself tc
your paper upon the ‘Spiritual Philos
ophy of the Ancient Art of Greece’
more than two weeka ago, and it has not
appeared yet. Now, people don’t care
anything about these murders and the
little tlnugs that happen about town.
It iR art tliat \
two berrii
“i P ¥*» * n( * then dMtttit t
sian bath of fiva hmid red
under an open window yk ^
mometer it aero: w^ ^ rf*
iuSe 11 ?** Pmake
lea, and \
tnd then two
’.•ommiti n to him Stf d |n^ r L*| 1 “ " s ' a>
foa&F. -sai ftkn ltd could tcoV.Tii fF“.
CptU, 'i/V <*>on* and ’poe-
”, “»Wod»nd , t fre.h
***** W T , pnl. i o „.v *
scraped up two
somcFi-dur to gut iV liccnw with
the preacher; hut il don’t
It la art that we uecd. Art ia the great
refiner of humanity.'’
The reporter waa duly impreaaed.
(ltafiortcra are an imiiroaaible race, with
an exterior ayatem of nervea.) He re
plied to the diaanpolnted author that
there were precirely hi. aeiitimenU, and
that he would hare aacriflced a week'*
aalary any time to have read that paper
on the 1-hiloiopy of the Anoient Art
ill Greoce.”
The amateur author and the mupa-
“«“« reporter parted aSectionately,
carta nonrUk«... “ j . *' *“>oh lm-
thetic reporter parted aBectionately.
and the reportorlal intellect atrayed into
the houaeof a leading publiaher'
“ " M ® v ideut that aomnthing had
*1 and a bam. i >»#i ‘•urtful—qi
natural and ah.rn. ^d hurZlLo’c^
-lightly disturbed Uj.”n.7.1i7fln‘?Mri" ‘i»« " rii
pire of the man of hooka. He looked wi*^ ienlthy, wealthy and
interrogatively at the reporter, whose Pario .t.t *
morr.iirial „o„.:uiu.!— . . Early riling, in civilized socletr >1
way, tend, to .horten lit? "SSL’V'
>gatively> . _
• A . r , ■•“ribilitiea perceived the
In the intellectual temperature
of that leading house.
cited amusement rather than alarm
among the holders of investments in il
lumination. The point of jtlip discovery
point of .the dis
Vi nmka. ^notffi this morning, Is that
carboniz'd paper atweerb thepUrpoxb that
it xcm thought platinum alone could
and is not ouly as cheap as ashes, but
better than precious metal. All
«a
culties but this of the cohip
tion cf the . Wick of the cleo*
trie candle did beeii SVbtcoiiie. Th*
generation of electricity has become
families. Them aie.many well-known
eleatriofll fr.inWuea*-* The divisibility
of tho current has been found possible.
It is as divisible under Edison’s process
as a volume.of gas.
Wb.At of thefidiSon lamp? It can t>5
made at a cost of twenty-five cents.
In the simplest form it is as cheap as a
gas tip. It is a £)l{$ glass globe, about
•i r ' ^ • i 1 haven t seen those reviews in your
•v .. ^ \ P g l >€r ' akh ,°ugh I sent your editor ad-
l , .4 . hat . » '•>- vxnce coplea of all the leading mega-
<rk and aupp-ort | »’ nea,” retd the man of letter,, at rifle
he atily. He could not be anything but
con' rteoua if he tried, but there waa a
ingot itreif never did*eny^ood^Sr.'i!.
» farmer’s hoy hu bren . n *
dincluiiati, Ohio!
Whf.-TVaV? *uet» M Falling ol the Womb,
Whi.-TVaV* «uon m F
,n . l !*mnin*lon c
Hicii N T ,0 Howurth A H«IUrd
T - ^1* by* 1 ! «inid.l.. w Si 50 pwr hn*”’
haaw
reckon 1
“Noteiiie. J *** *
tress incrpf/louR.,
matter tiiahe 6nti’t >.
your daugler prop^flv?’
Mrs. Plpdgle pushed bk'ck Uv
and eros-rTtet htiee^ berof® sn.
swered. Ten slifl ebook nef
mouru fully,
" I never ^und out,” she said, till
they was dve married as how he’d
hdrf gun at il—nothin' but a poWdeN
horn. Aud,' 1?lth a gesture of dis-
gllst. ''lie’s ,ie povrerfUllesi no account
critter ye evt did see.”
“ You nist feel badly to let your
daughter gtaway with such a mau.”
“Oh, sh 4 ' ain’t aonel Did ye
think he fd ary housqV ftlt her inT
Wky, donSyoukaow? They’s a-livin
to home wfli me.
This arazing piece of intclligencfl
■ . WorHiltsa .Maff. . .
y° u <»uld ree
_ healthy blooming men
rXd from ^" dl ? n . * b »‘ have been
inFi, ™"! !* d ’. of «ioknc.., iuflerlnx
beingm.de to get ud heSS.“"A?
kir orange or large
i Nurvefl TiW Masters.
The sweetest oratory that 1 have 11s-
t*®cd If qn^liff of lq forest wd6rheti I
awoke from a twilight dream which had . - —
taken me as I sat Vanuiii*-against lie stopper, through which the copper
base of a monster tree. Tn®y were ! wires pass, and a strip of carbonized
oppnjite side, and I ootfld not ! p*aper, shaped like n horseshoe, connects
v ’ ” the wires. The air is exhausted in the
globe. Turn on the electricity, whioh
is quite as simple an operation as turn-
is siniplt
is, and t
opposite i
8he Raid: “^Inco' we Were^chil-
deen I have felt a deep interest and
friendliness in your welfare, and since
fW'ft '“5- ble^e-IVs- o hope,
nave longed to share my joy with you.
-y*V» igive your lieart to your
Merf”l- He said: “ I can’t do that,
Molly. I would if I could, because you
wifh it 1 gave ft to you last winter
during our meetings of the v»ii j—
a cqfht, ami if you leally don’t want to t globe does not become heated,
keep it yourself, and really don’t in the ' warm, but bv
'“* re for >1. you may give it toff be .any combi
r yen like, for I shall never have light
ouern
... iroon becomes and
mains luminous, giving out a soft,
brilliant, powerful light, and the wick
endures. No limit to its endurance has
been found. No matches are needed to
ntrikea light, l'ou tiltifch the key and
there is your illumination. The glass
Itgi
lea-t
whoever.
auv use for it. 1 would like, you know, I extii
to share a blessedness of hope, very ! tors,
km ‘ It .. ..
•ossibility can there
■glass
likely ninoh the aame-as yours if you
won Id.' only aftafpre'tUji
mightrtiave roll alPfli^ tl
the joy with which I hope
can’t you, Molly?’’ She
John I” and then'there was a fumbing,
jud ii ho diibi’t kis- her and >ho didn't
kiss him, wliy “Katydid” ?.nd tho
was afr Tull b? them. Then she
id: "You must tell pa how you
feel;” and he said: “Isn’t it too shorn
after getting a new heart to tell u fel
low’s experience?’’ nnd she said: "Not-
»% pH. It is, prOpe* and I am very
»/e’V 'He saidfw" Not ns happy,
nga i
cfly, as if 1 had given my heart to thq
skea lils ques-
Lord, are you?’’ ” He askei
tion ih a pathetic and apprchei^ive
same, John. I’lUee that tli
Lord gets it p^mat.” Then they went
off to injfm ^md gat. an earthly
blessin''f pftm him, for .Ttihn is in thn
business and very ptosperous.
ou».
pip
!ihl»* flflaautage on shipl|oard.
applied with the happiest re-
lU»« heretofore extra hazanl-
nearly to<i away the mistress’ breath.
Before slj could reply, Mrs. Spriggla
continued
. “ Itya's did’s did. ’Tain’t [no] use
fuasia*. I'ockon.”
" Birt low 1 could you let her marry
him witlmit kuowiug more about him
than youad?”
“ Well, it’i flvin’ in the face o’ Provi
dence not o take up with a husband
when lie copes along.”. She glanced up
appeuliqglyas she spoke. “Gals can’t
get a good husband every day—they
can’t sol”
"But,” aid the mistress, "it seems
he is not agood husband.”
Mrs. Spriggle’s face, which had
brightened slightlv, took on a gloomier
htte, am* she pulled the black bonnet
down ovir it.
‘ Tha’s so,” she assented, tearfully*
“ He’s-mm thatmarjrhusbawlr- That’s
made a mistake and in
serted telegraphic dispatches and Na
tional newl instead of tho* aaagazinaf
The book* publisher listened attetf-'
iively, tod it was evident that his
wounded feeling *ere somewhat
V I*do gay. But,” as she rose to go,
* *^ * ^ ' ^ -’»Wta,‘if lie
“Wielibe he can ketch rabi
knowed how. to make .a.trap^jnowl
must be ggttin’ along “
A 8m! Story.
ry singular case of loss of ner-
Jentiiy has been discovered at
Bel I air, Ohio,’ and has attracted much
will* bJ'Ajj 0n.ce abolishing tho (attention from medical, Wen,' who alt
hohsee, aim iuiro- admit that nothing just Jibe <t tiiij, ever
■ enkindles, vastly red
id thus qpeedily-ptft doiffi’the
l insuxaac^. s This light wnl do
rith the Acesaity of heat in well
'Beither heats nor
reduce the liability of
settling illplninati
ing the temperaturei
lout-chang-
temperature.
therh ia. A combustion, there is
no smoke, so th4 this is the lflAilong
sopfl tor galleries. Wherever
ire can be *ret?n^_ light may be
cheaply produced, so djgV
excuse for dark alleys uk.iv
tertor pf .tli btJttfars, forbj
leas
An Old-Fashioned Hotel.
1 Hotel.
[fttiner'i Full* JUportar.J'%^,
li waeoneof those old-bo-''
VrrteKinx «f A k<
.panment, but An enti
inatnntfy flood*! with uflbti
ror o{ AUVi'kO wlk darkuem
and that? may be il
tela where VeVery thi5c ilW> itolf." . ^ e, '.. >D . d
Theftodfdrd was a jol^old 7?Jtew wl ''f' tb?oi!
i ai» nl-
miglU be fed daily,
{Where she can cet what
Vd to be hunted up'whenaQything w«
Wanted by a guest. An aeoantrta Wi ir
;uesU
_.ongo
orders to he called a!
mer came along one
rnhiw.loUVd i train due at that time,
a ItoWora Was thunderstruck, but in
pil lamp with
jjatire city could be supp
L AND FLOWERS.
tvro ieltfers asking
a plants and 'fluw-
okfgize for writing
.pve 'tjovrfiw, Why
klpqrjt^o A>n»«Ums»
Xnature? “In all
■ns, flowers
moral
1»e axr%Tiff --_
a moment the eflept of the shock pawed
away, and he began to nod iu his chair
while the travel
electricity from a single esta!
” rk, * 4 *“
e travel [or put JbUaT
ter. - r *a)id ydd.Mgrtjiat
"be called at that thqjo,Iand-
rd?” queried
at W^ThWImrd i
Wretched himself and B^r&tched'
all ti one time. . “ft.nJft-n.rw
WV’
under t ^
I should
for '
1 wipg% \eichit
2®br3
"Him
aake<
i-tipped daisy.”
who does not
ipatilffft travel
we can fix ypu out that wAy,
sleepy hid Lowlow as h'e
yawneda^d dis^pi
New York, for instance, is to be .
into twelve distrlota, each reeaivi
magical. current from to indipesp^-Tj;
center. fotlr to sii district 1k°5 •
this system would comprehend the
paot.pottioaot Gineinnath i
Edison's favorite theory on the * -
ject is that the gas companies will” 1 .
g lad to buy the right of lighting unfl
is Inventiob, ana that the wires vf...
be cobveyed through tho gas pipes. fj£
mstimk
appointments are simple*
A|
. I tot' #
♦rant, besides heiqg*
turned into
Ipfentifully than
iff** of U j»ian ts indbors,
iW' - . ; :
o»n eryiUy cultivated
Jly 1n any good soil;
l compost is a good light loam
and oM manure or leaf mould with the
addition of sand to keep the whole
Ven.
By eonstantly removing decayed flow-
•rs before e seed pod CRn swjll, the
. ... .. pod can swJll, the
growth of the plant and the continued
development of now buds and flowers
•pon the now growth are mutters of
soorse.
To destroy insects on rose?, mix a table-
tewpoonful of white hellebore *
f ir a ' cr ’ ant * a pP l y k with a ?nri
the
his destroys the insects and the roses
I clear. Another effectual remedy is
‘ i oil soap, one pound of soap being
l to cifjnt gallons of water. It is
plied at night, tho plants being thor-
Jjhly drenched every two or three
s after being exhausted with
should have the terminal
r.All their branches clipped off-
kasHt for two or three weel
braposed
little water;
of well-'
:r; then repo*,a
!;te g ”T%
nails, and a layer
i the ^ of %7, e „ r
■eenre good drainage. I n a few weelfs
new shoots full of flower buds will start
*11 overgrowing very rapidly.
bed. After he had fallen Into a sound
KJJMUlMIHUVAtLO MB Miupip. ■ .
Agents are already here foy the/ , lr
pose of introducing the*’EdfsoiiC JL *
Ssss^yAMi tfsiyfcjafts'to &
asked sharply " what’s . waiiMUf” The
lapdlord’s voice Came through the pan-
jilr “Stranger, seaiagka yott’ve : pot the
clock all fixed, I wish you’d call the
other chap in 85, who said he’d like td
take that early traih if t could find any
way of waking him up in time.” The
* * <fi, * ‘ '
set is not to eell the
dividual?, but to ®hjp»dy Capifal’*^ I“*
plying districts. It is Edisott’s
Ruinate that the cost of tbs p u rtr i„
iglit. according to, this wi ]i hft
nmcthifl* lealthdti dne-Wf^ Q ® f
“» *“• He '“ »“ r « V5ll not -xceerl
itrici^rt R motofT’to rim
sew^ig mach^ and the ^ ’ an(J ^
a meter for the exact mens-
eaclTho 1 ^ tk ®i ele ctricity furnished to
each hq,, ej We need hot d#ell upon
traveler was displeased, but be was the
only one to complain pf the maimer- JU,e * ” e , nee “ bot ditell upon
conducting the nt»tel years, the tevo 1 uU°rmr* C ° ( ^ 8COVer ^* k
old fellow told os.
Activity fs not Ilwaya Energy.
Re
There are some yen whose failure to
succeed in life is/problem to others, ns
well aa to themadves. They ar,- indus
trious, prude/ and economical; yet
after a long lib of striving, old age finds
them still pf5r. They complain of ill
luck. Thereto fate is alwav against
them. B/ the fact is that they mis
carry beahae they have mistaken mere
actiyity/ r energy Co founding two
tfiings/«"enUa|ly different, they have
suppoed that if they were always busy,
they v ouM be certain to be advancing
thefr,fortune- They hxve forg,uteri
thatoiedirectedefforts ie but »Tia»teof
Tbe .person who would suc-
arknblo Sp^fs on tyg Sun.
come large and fetnarkablC spot? have
recently been seen on the ?nn, and it Is
worth the whin of .those who Ji a ve. tele
scopes to watch closely the solar di*k.
miu spot? are interesting object?, even
when they remain substantially 'un
changed in appearance frqin day to day;
under their immediate ob
servation. Pome nine months,ago. a
man, apparently about 5ff, father
slender, of good address, and neatly at
tired, found himself standing on the
platform of the railway station of that
s hantf, Containing tjhner-
*rot?rt itffd,.foirenirtTClcs. He had no
idea of hisjjdmej atid notiiiug furnished
any clue to it excopt the 6n6 word
Dor livo or three hours lie Yrletl to trace
some connection between himaelf and
the past, hut without avail. Eveiy-
thing Wad blauk tfi the tnomnnh when
he seemed to have awakened from a
1od|t ? oblivious sleep. He wqnt to the
nearest Inn; informed its keener of his
pec.ulial thetital colidftlon, and Retired
^ariy Id neu, pershftaed ludi li.3 tTlPmory
would soon be restored. The next day
a 4mnpcrnnoe lecturer came to the house
and getting acquainted .with. Ralph in
vited biqj A? iieto 4lW diecour,e in the
evening, f.fllpli WfU pffeifent, a.M while
listening attentively W»s seized with an
’ ’ 1 — out-doors
Ift
who, after frilling Upon him and beating
him very, badly; caused his At ree"
oeverai,prominent cuizeiia became in
terested in him and labored in vain to
lehrn something’ of Ms antecedents.
The phydeian of thecduniy (Belmont)
tance, ana
inilruinry made Ids acifiiaiiuance,
after a while, seeing that he was Very
intelligent, quick-.wjtttcL and tru^t*
worthy, appointed’ him nl&* r neffl$tli'nt;
Ho has far more'tliftn average capacity,
has .a good knowledge of business and
is a very expert penman. He is meni
tatlysound In-every thing eircenrp<*r-
M*nal ideutity. Many people thought
him feigning at flrAt, but nine months
of clone observation has convinced them
ofc his absolute siriobriiy, And-fttrr Ife-
wcttor.of llie infirmary lias reporf^d Jhe
strankfe ‘(Ase in Yulf tb '
CJavttc, .
r os)>i(al
•f>M '« of powiblo disturbance In hil
JUS, ' ler '
in,, unworthy ropresentxtive of repor-
■ I t- 'ent mournfully stated that he
written those reviews, and
^4 ’after midnight to steer
\ the quicksands that
tiatiqjp of manu-
^ the system
Hurd Against Hisosse.
dead WuV&tf-FW* bl '(5».
&^a^23-S3l»SSs^&'fe
i iMliejit.-lMrt Hi li Imj ,
Kmim, Fraale
* bo» m i yffij
Serthh, Miff
kknanthH, VnkiNi.
22LMA * 11 Of th*
thei
fff
m safety wts*
attehd,fch«
scrlpiTOlor’"©^!,” tod
ceinthsnded that proof W t.
_—-,4<ytd . ,
that doth hedge the managing e
himself to Natnre’a sweet reskttei
that, alas 1 on calling for the non.
»at then he
ho divinity
ditorand
But
>5
ciency MSJ3JTR ni 'T
^7 in fde morning feeltarasiTha
lenoe to his own nature, Mai 2t?r l?
(U edeote offi
don’t^wsi t to tir bn dd rxncogurfrd-f
. " * ?»» to get dnwn.stelr. ,
$10,(1
&
unwire prtotice. in M -™-
‘tem.jpv. °pto
ON LIPS & PROPERTY
w«.w, fcltafYl'Au.
8. a NEWTOM'S SAPKTY LAMP CO,,
S.LK.flooM, »» WBiy 1 BadAMpwat. hTV.
»Of course X do not blame any on*,’;
‘ 111 the
he said. “ still there is reason in all
things, and you see it is book reriews
that the people want. Now the Semir
Daily JYximpet i9 h ier^^ood paper. al
tion to literary matters would do a great
deal for its oiroulfition. Literature is
the bread of Ufa.”
“ Certainly,” .responded thfl reporter,
" I agree with you. Y/I were the tol-
tof of tb^ TAmplt I should, make
reviews the lerfflingr speciality of
paper, and”—but Jiist nere the tepOrter*
fearing to be told that life insurance
1(T be the leading topic of the
ihpu)d ;be the
journal of which he was the unworthy
representative, be hurried his oreide
watch into his pocket, picked up his five
cent handkerchief, whioh in his conster-
best of His way to the obscurest corner
of the office of the Semi-Daily Trumpet,
where he mediated upon the capabilities
( or differentiated tastes presented by the
uman race, and he wondered why that
Huxley
fellow J
r didn’t write itrup.
th6 tfaVes of fntefisa cold which play so
large a' pat£ fn mVr winter experienfifeS/
Men Who Require Presence of Mind.
Many railroad accidents are pre
vented by a presence of mind on the
part of engineers. A passenger train
in the Ghicajroi Burlington & Quincy
Jtoad was fountlinf a sharp curve, iuBt
under a piece of tall timber. The
watchful, engineer, saw a tree lying
across tne tfftcfc sixty; feet ahead of the
locomotive. The train running at
the rate of thirty-five miles an hour,
and to check its momentum before
teaching the obstruction was out of the
question. TM engineer took in the
situation at a glance. H& threw the
throttle wide open, and the engine shot
ahead with the velocity of .an arrow
find with so tremendous a force tuai the
tree was picked (ip by the cow-catcher
"trod flung from the track as if it had
been only a willow withe. A man with
not so cool.a head would have made
(he bsat possible use qf those sixty feet
in tjie way oi elieikinj the speed of the ,
♦^ain. That would have caused a flis- S?^L,S® W “P® 0 *® 8 ■ 010
jSradfordj to Cu* ! ’ nee,, > fas bringing
to express ttaih otne Kankakee
llhe frdffi IfldiafifltfoliS; As tlid 6hgi 08
toot offt .from the decti fitit tod struck
a short piece of Straight traOk^ leading
to a bridge, a hetfd bf c#tts*ware dis
covered running down the road. Tiid
running
distance to the river was only 100 feet.
Bradford knew he oould not stop the
locomotive to the bridge they would
fall Between , thft timbers, Mid’the ob*
stfrnctlon woiila the.trqjn off and
probably result in a frightful t6W of
life. It t
Drunkards’ Wive#.
If there be a lonely woman amid the
multitude of fene tod sorrowful women
more t#i>e pilled fhan-nnfliiiar^t think
it is a wife looking upon the one she has
promised to honor, lying upon the bed
with his hat and toots on. ,Her com
forter, who swore at her as long as he
could speak at all. Her protector,, ut
terly unable, to Jj-lisli a fly from kaa
own face. Her companion, lying in
the stupor of death, with nbne of
its solemn dignity^ As he is entirely
unconscious of her acts, I wonder if she
K,.* i iuh*»
but when, as sometimes happens, start
ing changes are seen to take place under
never employs the slowly passing mo
ments iii taking down her ola idol, her
the very eyes of the observer, the iiitfer-
1 to the highest pitoh. What
rises ewq . fJllvu
SrFl ot nature would not willinglv
spend hours at the telescope with tlm
:imn™ -—i-- - ■
comparing it witii its broke
faced irnuge before her. Of all poor,
broken idols, scattered into fragments
SOMETHINO OF CHEMISTRY.
To the bent of our ability-we w
> In
. aluminiu;
-he pi
ealciui
•nd f<
ali
from the
£fi "V“a are clay, lime.
!“£ *r®. r * a " lc or the deexyed
Ume. magnesi
•o four aoiid
, t>ur „»‘ls; tire prite,.-
- °1 epils are clay, Unre,
ceedin life la like a markKman (iriop at
• target; if hi. .hote miu the S
they are a waate of powder. Bo iu thi
*“ me , Hie; what a man docs
muBtbe made to count, or it micht al-
moat have been left undone. Every
body knows some one in his circle of
friends, who, though alwavs nlert, has
this want of energy. The distemper, if
we may call it such, exhibit*
, TArious ways., In som* cedes
ie* of the bnsinere In 0 a« mSei
whatis done u uol done either at the
right time or in the tight way En;
ngy, correctly Understood, is activity
proportioned to the end. *
Jinnee of Hoeing, for instance—What
n ,Wf e aptuaujc observed—a.greatr«pr>t
on the sun suddenly split { « ♦"*-
for the divine patience of womanhood
sr together and cement with
nircu , .,f ■ U «ien y spilt in two, the
S P | g ld " lg rapllll l' a l’“ rt u though
sliding over sinootu ice?
«un spots have an especial interest on
the uue *pbiined connection
to gather
leant such a ruin as this seems the
most importable to mold anew into py
form of homeliness. Ar^I it there i^ a
commandment seemingly impossible to
obey, it is for a woman tb lote a
she is in deadly fear cfjuhonor a man
hut be ’ ’ ‘ ’
r i’i ", ot UDlik ?!y ‘his brilliant auroral
> display may be seen this winter.
- ...wu, lueir cause, anu the
phenomena of terrestrial magnetism.
genernl rule, when sun spots are
numerous, the mystic ourtains of the
Auror* are frequently seen waving
noiselessly In the northern heavens. It
a man win
intelligently*
i not speak his commands
1 he theo’rr of recognizing our friends
in a future woxld is a beautiful one,
and. worthy o t much though^ but I
think it is con mendable to try to keep
our friends in a condition^ recognize
The Uninformed Visitor.
ts, nitrogen, and
iflfer
' their eonatftugnte ay.
•0 have narifee
l they
the proportion
in their origin,
‘ ■ting some
that give
Hmaqu.*mMar.]
e . funniest scene of the year od-
Tuo.dlv 1 G *“i? herman ’" headquarters
sivht. ^' or A , S P a,or w «« "howing tho
!tfb.?n. f ^“fh'ngton toe country con-
i {.’^d introducing him to dis-
I he todk- h hi Kmoa t 0 ‘her place.,
.took hm to see the Gener.l of.i.A
while he is ali ve so ho will know his
wife and eliildn n, and not, as otteu pc-
curs, turn them* out into the storm of a
winter inidnigjit, or murder them in his
frenzy.
ffl* .yTJWU» Ago, leaving some mil- wlthru.JaS con »Htuent shook hands
equally *“ d remarked, in an
Otago.
child,
/nraLJiT- twe ^J-ooe year*
J® wy living grand-
State, 1 ®<Sre“t
1 fe^epdeavmjii'g to
not?” W ° rein the lat ® war > were you
MSSLfS! “f* oi 8h*m
Wjiat to Ti Acn—Rev. Charles
Brooks, father oi ihe State normal
schools in 'Aiaevi !U > h >’ ®
cacher this qucsti-o n - What shall I
teach a\y pupils?” B. « answered, “Teach
thorc
live ^‘Wi«
liennively
cally.
noroughly thu » five| things* 1. Tc
L.sly,
'o think com pro-
ckon mathemnti-
y fluently; and, 5.
; To write grammatio<v Ay* H you sue-
To n
U-ach theiq t five tilings,
ISd befo [ e uonplussed in hie
Suite! V he co “‘d do so, decren.iY, , j
ofl* It P your pupils, to them 1 '*™"t*. to your
ja, ]» wlf ’ - Soml,Jk
life, i' ocssfully ■—r - , - *
dec«|ntiy, I you will nobly have me your duty to
took him only a naif a second
to think of this. The other half of the
second was utilized in giving his engine
such 4 quantity of bteam.that it covered
that one hundred feet of track in stout
the same that a bolt of lightning would
travel from the top of a lightning-rod to
the ground. The colts were struck
and knocked down the embankment
just as'the were entering thebridgo.
An Editor’s Bream.
He fell asleep after n time, and lol he
dreamed again. And it seemed to him
in a vision that, having armed himself
with certain papers ana books, he turned
his steps once more toward the place
and knocked at the gate.
“Hello, is that you again?” said
>etsr. “ Wh * ’ 9
Peter. “ What do you
“ Let these persons again come forth,”
replied the eaitor, and Peter this time
made them all pass through the gate and
stand outside.
They came as before and uttered the
same cries as More.
I gave you 1 ?” yelled tto first.
“It wsh rotten,” replied the editor.
“ Why didn’t you write up my soda
fountain ?” cried the druggist.
other office,” calmly teplied the local
man. “ '
“ Why did you write about old Tone-
linson’s hens and never speak of my new
gate?” shouted the third,
‘ Old Tomlinnon paid for his adver-
i didn’t. Here’s the BUI,”
in the programme?” groaned the
talent.
“ Take a look at this manuscript of
yours and see for yourself,” said the edi
tor with a grim smile.
The rent of the company yelled their
complaints, in unison, and the editor
calmly sorted out a series of bills for un
paid subscriptions, and presented each
with one; and it was so, that when they
hair and rushed violently down a steep
place into the sea, and St. Peter, taking
thi ’’ *
e editor calmly by the hand, led him
within the gate and said:
“ Come, lrientl; these chaps managed
to slip through here in spite of us, but,
thanks to the press, we now kilow what
sort of fellows they are. Gome in and
stay; we need a few such men as you in
here.”
-re
*k»‘ ** <» »ot get rmongh
, u‘ri ene ? gh re,t -*•
As . , “ m e for there things:
sleep. #e «. usnese, our instxrtlity,
will net txkx *na the premature
hence ottf nervo. •una ot life, Htlf
our hasty toaster, ’core, the eery
gifiOg out of tin at**, '"» his mental,
of Us are old at three-. Half of our
tflme man ought be 1, fl -ing die-
moral and physical prime. _ . - e, be-
iro-.
wives, especially In the faro,
tricta, tko long before their tin.
cause they do not get rest and sleep ,
portioned to their Ubor, Nine time
• • ' it would be 1
_ veaellpe re Were w. naeearei^
$777^T.(% , R“7i»SfI s =
'uCsfj^.ifyry.e-.y-e. *
0fi6ii)BRSS«!^asS
sslg-
. „ totter for all
artle^Jf the farmer should get up anfl
light the fires and prepare breakfast for
his wife, she coming directly from her
toilet tojlha-breakfifl! table, because it
t am; * ‘ “
almost always happens that she hai to
L wain up to see things right long after
1 '-qsbtod has gone to tod. * This ia a
monitro ' la (^ crue * " lT **
tod mot he.*** ■
*UL obtervaUons have
'nded that evidence
Mkteoroloqk
now became so exu . t0 embl , u , to
is rapidly accumulate % Kurc , ot the
determine pb s >tlvelY tn. . Mp across the
cold aerial wavee wnieh iw 'p^ e
oo#ntry during our winter *. , m *t 0 the
indicationi are that we owe tht
great area of high barometer in *
eastern Siberia, where the presc
'urj
sometimes exceeds 81.60 incbes‘and iu
temperature falls as low as 76 degrees
belew zero. The pole of the greatest
cold is in the neighborhood of Yakutsk,
on the Lena, where the average ther
mometric reading in Januarv is 41
degrees below zero, and where the sever
est cold exceeds by ten decrees that ex
perienced by explorers in high arctic
regions.. This is also the region of the
highest barometric pressure known in
■01AJW ALL DRUGQI8. _
ISAP OjyiflER
V vvJ^UWdih JlXbl*)bue.m»tt4W^ W
[FOR
I'A 9 "h AND STRENOTN
S'SfolWMtff
•uiia Sal tMv.ifV bo 1
Pennaylv.
HALL I DAY/”
(Succpswfq 10 Ck tm Bo ' J[ A BistoySo.)
i'*r. a °>
AUGERS, IRUIR; Bflfcffi rOVKI
MichlnelYdf 1 llJ^nR and UrlilVnt wall/' B«at la
Amstlca, cttaLWDAVMAk)w«;iitvt aj!
l^cel Addroia LOOMIS > AW* yugm, p.
The December number 6? tlfitf fiorth
AmericaA jEttiomologht contains ah illus
trated article oh ft new.parasite of -the
willow tree, py Miss £miN A\ Smith,
late assistant statfl entomologist ,pf Illi
nois. There are alto two papers by Mr.
Grote describing some neW speefts of
lepidcptera collected by Prof. F. H.
8now of (lie Statei University of Kansas.
. _.S ----- -J
Tefifl!?/
LATEST MABKET (iliOTAjfifeis.
PI.AVB,«RA1N AND MEAL.:
ATLASTA—ElolirI Superfine, *4 family,
‘ " '*■ "* fancy, $8.25.
♦ 7.75; cxtM . ..
\Vh*nt-*Ure following pflCflS are millers’
Choice white, 08a70cj yqliotf; •Vvn’*7'j. , 6[:itf&
r On55c for feed oats', and 60a75c UM vV^.T.
demand at 6714c., Grits: $4.00.
8T. LOUIS—Flottr firmer; double extra
$5.»fl(fl$$8.45j choice to fancy dfi.OOnffM'..
IgHer)
No..? }jo. $1,17. Com higher at
higher, ot 8*6JA
LOUISVILLE—Tlhur: ftu
N»m l.nw. Thai
ftS ms.'gtc
titled. KenMom date -»ltb itninp. •
Tim* limited. Addre««>^ 'tU»: K, LKMOt
f »sip«s
** 4 S ndor*ed'by H«n P rt and Oaida!
~ id * firrjdpa ipd hlcblr r*com.
blfbl f r*cou
\ MRS of Oemtloe Roarl.oif Whliklei . V ur %
®r.SS! a ®“ au '"
to Pr,
„JfcSS
vss&mm
NTERS!
ATLANTA, CA. I«i
ftortUtfori (6 the SoAthtrft .Stuqmper Unity
auriar tdV—
BEST ROttfR EOWIIli
Ever WadD-Prloe, 4* 1
• ISWftwI lteiKt, Seva fcr.vk.-Intcllnka, ■
wo tatTgSVrig wAiisa:
OPIUM'-*"
W/'h I tD'fofi VJrjf^
»5.75@C.W; MM. ■ ACM®* 00
Wheat: Red, arnWnnd «,•«. CoriV -||
White, 46; rnisod, 43. Oats: >Th?l4/ hit;' ij
mixed 38o.
CINCINNATI—Flour: Family, $6.00a6 15
fnnev 86.40afl.75 Wheat: $1.27al.30. Corn:
42c. ‘ Oats: 40d.
NEW YORK—Flour: CommoA to fair ex
tra, $5 80a6 24; good to choice extra, $6 Ton
Wheat: Ungraded winter red, 41 40al 40^;
Corn: Ungraded, 68u63. Oat*: No. 3, A7%.
( Ol'NTRV PRODUCE.
ATLANTA—Eg^fl, 18n20c. Butter, choice
Tennessee, 22>^i{2oc. Poultry: Large, 18u22c.
liens, 22J^a2o; small sizes. 13al7c. Sweet po
tatoes 50nfi0cents per busnel. Irish potatoes,
$2 75h8 00 per barrel.
BALTIMORE—Butter: Prime to Oholeo
wes,ern packed, 20a22c. Eggs, 30a22c.
LIVE « rOC K
ATLANTA—Choice Tennessee cattle 8c;
common l^a2^s; Georgia raised, 1)4h2o.
Sheei
ieep, 3c for choice.
CINCINNATI—Hogs: Common $2 7’o3 40
light, ?3 40a3 75; packing, $3 80a4 90: butch
ers, 3 80a3 90.
PROVISIONS.
ATLANTA—Bulk meat: Clear rib sides.
7c; pork strips, fl^o. Bacon: Sugar cured
hams, lO^alOXu; sides, 8Xe; shoulders, 69fc;
breakfast, 8o8%c.
BALTIMCRE—Mes* pork, $13 50. Bull:
meats: Loose v shoulders, 4%; clear Sides,
7, Bacou : Shoulders, 6&e; clear rib sides
8^; hfinis, OJ^alOo. Lord, reCucd in l:ei
834-
CINCINNATI—Pork, $13.00. Lard, 1%
Bulk meats: Phoulders, 4Xc; clear ribs,
6J10C; shortclaar7&c. Baoon: 3honlders, b x /i;
clear ribo,73£Q; hamH, 9alO>4c. Lard: 8c.
NEW YORK — Mess pork, $12 6M
I6ng clear,$7.20; short do $7 40. Lard, 8c.
COTTON.
ATLANTA — Good Middlings, WAc
Middlings, 12J<cj good ordinary,
NEW YORK— Middling- uplands, 12«c ;
middling Orleans, l2He.
GALVESTON—Middlings, 12Kc; low mid-
dlings,llJ4o; good ordinary, ll%c.
NORFOLK—Middlings, l2M6c.
BALTIMORE—Middlings, 12%c; low mid
dlings, 12^c; good ordinary, 12c.
SAVANNAH — Middlings, 12-Kc;
dlingB, 1194 c; go Ad c
A medical advertisement
skinny men or women are not admin
Neither would they to if they bad Bp
says
Ired.
Dr.C. E.Shoemaker,o' Raiding. P
on;y aural surgeon In the Unit d 8.a
devotes all his time t > the irealm* nt of (har
ness and diseases of the eHr atid >a ! .n rh;
pecinlly ranniog ear. Nearly twci-ty years t
perienoe. Tbous'nds testify io iiis iki l. Cqii
suit him by mall or otherwise. Paihphlet frs«*.
FlMPLRS AND JlUMOfifiOR TdK FACE —In
this condition of the frHn, the vegetipo i*
the great remedy, hr it arts directly upon
the cause. It cleanses and purifies the blood,
thereby causing humors oi i.ll kinds to ois
appear.
Ifoung men, go W«tit)Vard telegraphy; Ad-
w , ivills, Wig.
drew BeValantiDe,Manager, Janeivil
isaai._
•• : !^SimeieSSei^aSi
FREE TO ALL.
.MinWAMsa
“ 80 j)H|ce«i^a sere*
cSSW QSoBTrete
'seif&SiSsan 1
JtVVifiVtUlS,.# .
To Consurnptlves.
17 ll«rk thi mSutvsl-
4fit.,SfL55aS!lS«2S
a?vs£ss"ri
ON 30 DA JS’HtrAL
WAN TL
. bntoro a«i!iL*.i
I CIGARS TO 0EALER8
,$105»«'KST.
i cut tbla Notice Out
BAttl undlL'u iibvoor auDlleatlMiJil
Bseui
Ftrsri
CARLETUN'S HOOSSlOl
UAKLET01
ENCPvcLOPAEDfA.
’ The EtoBt n^hMbla alo«l* book ir*f!»rt*l*l. 4
Troa*nry of knowlerigo. Thore baa n*T*r b*fe»»
i r, « B'isute:».
I® AWfl asawjMSJC';^'
Scents for pastas?. Oataloga* of many •tandlr4
Apierlcan Bp*k Kxchaaaa,TrlbanpbupdiP*. N.T.
equal to It for «,d desire to ake a com tin*
aiii.7€r«r ! ir-' ”
UoLpAKPRS BottlS 1 , Sia’RoY. 1 c torttntion to
l»r4. Circular* and valuable i- 'ntlon or c»
rawapift-wfAf t %%*:
tn.ln^ Cb^m'at,;a 9 Ch-atniltHi. KmWai^ 1
C.G1LBERTS
STARCH
I V^ARD’S
iFi^e SMrtsfortQ
E M. &,W. WARD,
381 BKOADWAY.
N EW YORK.
TPfie
ST£Y
wr* BEST fl
Hanufactor^RflTUEBORO.^]
PHIILIMIKM PSinm ATPrAgTA-Sat
ftRSMT BUTTER COLOR
'
ifaimShtwi ~~
fllrerButter tt<9MI. -.Mlsed col__ ...
ThotuaniUof D.:lr incn.aiy IT IS I>
KsmSawIio oi«s ili Vkcro M f/suif*